Ok, yes, before you tell me, I know Digikam is not meant to be used with
network storage units. Anyway, I just wanted to check of anyone else has experienced this. I am out of my country for a few months. I have Digikam 6.0 in my computer, with local databases (in a m.2 ssd drive) and I can access my picture collection remotely (either using sshfs or though a VPN). The internet speed between the two hosts is not great, but not terrible either (~50mbps). However, digikam takes ages to scan the collection for new files. Something that over a local network should take less than 5 minutes, it can take more than 12 hours over internet. I realised that it is likely not a problem of the internet speed, but of the latency, which is ~100ms in this case. Is there any way to circumvent this problem and make it usable over an internet connection? -- Sent from: http://digikam.1695700.n4.nabble.com/digikam-users-f1735189.html |
On 20/02/2019 18:15, woenx wrote:
> Ok, yes, before you tell me, I know Digikam is not meant to be used with > network storage units. It is allowable to have the photos stored on a drive connected over a network connection. What is very heavily discouraged is using an sqlite database over a network connection. > Anyway, I just wanted to check of anyone else has experienced this. I am out > of my country for a few months. I have Digikam 6.0 in my computer, with > local databases (in a m.2 ssd drive) and I can access my picture collection > remotely (either using sshfs or though a VPN). But your database is local, so this is OK. > The internet speed between the two hosts is not great, but not terrible > either (~50mbps). However, digikam takes ages to scan the collection for new > files. Something that over a local network should take less than 5 minutes, > it can take more than 12 hours over internet. > > I realised that it is likely not a problem of the internet speed, but of the > latency, which is ~100ms in this case. That's quite a problem. > Is there any way to circumvent this problem and make it usable over an > internet connection? Turn off 'Scan for new files on startup'? Andrew |
Well, yes, I could disable the scanning for new pictures, but that would
defeat the purpose, since I have a shared photo library with my family and I use Digikam to check for new pictures that they may have uploaded to the shared storage. (Btw, what about a possible feature to display the last 100 or 200 imported pictures?) -- Sent from: http://digikam.1695700.n4.nabble.com/digikam-users-f1735189.html |
What would be really nice is if Digikam could use a file-watcher to look for additional photos, so that new albums or folders could be added/scanned without having to scan the entire collection. I have 20k pictures on my laptop, and 400k on the NAS, and to run even a local scan to add 10 new photos on the laptop takes nearly half an hour. On Thu, 21 Feb 2019 at 20:49, woenx <[hidden email]> wrote: Well, yes, I could disable the scanning for new pictures, but that would |
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